by the Rev. Donna Ross, ECR Communications
Coordinator
Explanatory note:
Deputies to General Convention are now debating
The Episcopal Church’s response to the Windsor
Report. The Windsor report was issued by the
Lambeth Commission, which was appointed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury in 2004 to respond to
developments in The Episcopal Church, including
the ratification and consecration of Gene Robinson
as the Bishop of New Hampshire in 2003. The
Windsor Report recommended:
(1) That the Episcopal Church
apologize to other churches in the
Anglican Communion for having “broken
the bonds of affection” by its actions.
Pending such an apology, those who took
part in Bishop Robinson’s ordination
should withdraw from functions within
the Anglican Communion, effect a
moratorium on the ordination to the
episcopate of anyone living in a
same-sex union, and explain how they
consider openly gay persons eligible to
be a bishop.
(2) That there be a moratorium on public
rites for blessing same-sex unions.
Bishops in Canada and the United States
who have authorized such public rites
should apologize for “breaching the
proper constraints of the bonds of
affection”.
(3) That bishops who have intervened in
other provinces, dioceses and parishes
express regret for the consequences of
their actions. Such bishops should
affirm their desire to remain in the
Anglican Communion; and effect a
moratorium on any further interventions.
(4) That the “listening process”
included in the Lambeth 1998 Conference
actually be instituted. (What this
“listening process” should include is
still under debate.)
(5) The Windsor Report also recommended
a number of structural changes that
would provide a more centralized and
definable authority within the Anglican
Communion, such as the creation of an
Anglican Covenant.
[For more on the Windsor Report, follow the
link to
http://www.anglicancommunion.org/windsor2004/]
As deputies to General Convention seek to craft
their responses to the Windsor report, their
discussions are being reported in the American
media. Media reports often simplify the discussion
to focus on more exciting parts of the debate, and
frequently reflect the reporter’s confusion on how
the Episcopal Church works. What follows has been
abbreviated from a report filed late last night by
Episcopal News Service.
From Columbus: Crowded
hearing spotlights Windsor Report response
Written by Matthew Davies
Full text of article at
http://www.episcopalchurch.org/3577_75880_ENG_HTM.htm
A public hearing on the
response to the Windsor Report welcomed
more than 70 speakers the evening of
June 14 to address the Standing
Committee on the Episcopal Church and
the Anglican Communion on four
resolutions (A160-163) that deal with
the expression of regret, election of
bishops, public rites for blessing
same-gender unions, pastoral care and
Delegated Episcopal Pastoral Oversight (DEPO).
More than 1,000 people packed the Hyatt
Regency Ballroom for the two-and-a-half
hour hearing, which began at 7:30 p.m.
An audio feed was provided for an
overflow audience outside the room.
In his opening comments, the Rev.
Francis H. Wade of Washington, committee
co-chair, said the most important thing
is listening. "All of us need to hear,"
he said. "The people doing the real work
are those who will listen and open their
hearts to hear."
Resolution A160 echoes the House of
Bishops' March 2005 Covenant Statement
in expressing regret with respect to
actions of the 74th General Convention.
It offers an "apology and repentance for
having breached the bonds of affection
in the Anglican Communion..."
The Most Rev. and Rt. Hon. John Sentamu,
Archbishop of York, said toward the end
of the hearing that the Windsor Report
was acting like a doctor, saying a
relationship needs to be healed.
"Anglicanism has always responded to the
challenge ... by scripture, reason and
tradition," he said. "Maybe the
committee should ask: do these
resolutions help us ourselves ... to
show the marks of our own crucifixion?"
Speaking against A160, the Rev. Michael
Hopkins, an alternate from the Diocese
of Rochester, acknowledged that if there
is an expression of regret, "it needs to
be much fuller and expressed by all."
Resolution A161 urges "very considerable
caution in the nomination, election,
consent to, and consecration of bishops
whose manner of life presents a
challenge to the wider church and will
lead to further strains on communion."
The Rev. Canon Kendall Harmon, a deputy
from the Diocese of South Carolina,
raised concerns about what he called the
clarity and honesty in A161. "The
Windsor Report uses clear language. This
resolution doesn't take the specific
language of Windsor seriously enough,"
he said. "We have been asked to place a
moratorium; the timeframe is clear ...
yet the language we get is to exercise
considerable caution -- a fudge. Let's
be honest, let's be clear."
Resolution A162 suggests that public
rites for blessing same-gender unions
not be authorized "until some broader
consensus in the Anglican Communion
emerges."
Resolution A163 commits to pastoral care
of those who disagree with past actions
of Convention; gay and lesbian persons;
and commends using, when necessary, the
Delegated Episcopal Pastoral Oversight (DEPO)
process.
Several speakers, including Bishop
Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, cited a
June 14 statement from Bishop N.T.
Wright of Durham that suggests if the
resolutions are passed without
amendment, the Episcopal Church will
have decided not to comply with the
Windsor Report.
Decisions made by the Episcopal Church
have global consequences, said Bishop
Pierre Whalon of the Convocation of
American Churches in Europe, "because we
are a global church -- the only global
church in the Anglican Communion -- and
our decisions can't be American first.
This General Convention has to convince
the Archbishop of Canterbury that the
Episcopal Church wants to be part of the
process that he set up."
Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire,
the first openly gay bishop in the
Anglican Communion, said that the light
of Christ in gay and lesbian people of
the church is being recognized and that
the Church's job is to discern the will
of God "as humbly as we can."
"Our homosexual agenda is Jesus Christ
... Are we not in this debate because we
have seen the fruits of the Spirit
evidenced in the lives of our brothers
and sisters in Christ who happen to be
gay?" he said. "This debate is not,
principally, about saving the Anglican
Communion -- we cannot make decisions
about what the Communion will or will
not do."
The committee will reflect on the
hearings and discuss the legislative
path of the resolutions through the
houses during its June 15 morning
meeting.
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